Siryan Engineer Builds Electronic Sniper Rifle From a Kalashnikov

Siryan Engineer Builds Electronic Sniper Rifle From a Kalashnikov

Siryan Engineer Builds Electronic Sniper Rifle From a Kalashnikov

Damascus, Oct 9 (Prensa Latina) Syrian engineer Hamzah Salam, resident at Shreihi village in the southern province of Sweida, has built a high-precision rifle which automatically operates by means of an electronic system.

Based on a Kalashhnikov, Salam explained that 'the automated system monitors the situation and, if necessary, opens fire. My electronic sniper is very convenient: it can be controlled remotely or placed in autonomous operation mode.

Salam has had an interest in electronics since he was a child, and would repair lamps and kettles before moving on to making improvements to radios, and even inventing his own wireless microphone. In university, he focused on sensor technology. Now he is continuing his research on electronic keys and computer recognition systems.

The information, broadly published in Syria and in media such as Sputnik and Al Masdar, indicated that Hamzah made such a decision after the attacks against Sweida by the Islamic State, Daesh, killed at least 258 people, most of them civilians, and injured 200 others and his people suffered dozens of victims.

Currently in Sweida, about 100 kilometers southeast of Damascus, the Army is carrying out an intense offensive against the last terrorist sites in the region.

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Siryan Engineer Builds Electronic Sniper Rifle From a Kalashnikov

Damascus, Oct 9 (Prensa Latina) Syrian engineer Hamzah Salam, resident at Shreihi village in the southern province of Sweida, has built a high-precision rifle which automatically operates by means of an electronic system.

Based on a Kalashhnikov, Salam explained that 'the automated system monitors the situation and, if necessary, opens fire. My electronic sniper is very convenient: it can be controlled remotely or placed in autonomous operation mode.

Salam has had an interest in electronics since he was a child, and would repair lamps and kettles before moving on to making improvements to radios, and even inventing his own wireless microphone. In university, he focused on sensor technology. Now he is continuing his research on electronic keys and computer recognition systems.

The information, broadly published in Syria and in media such as Sputnik and Al Masdar, indicated that Hamzah made such a decision after the attacks against Sweida by the Islamic State, Daesh, killed at least 258 people, most of them civilians, and injured 200 others and his people suffered dozens of victims.

Currently in Sweida, about 100 kilometers southeast of Damascus, the Army is carrying out an intense offensive against the last terrorist sites in the region.